Argentina In Advanced Stage of Yet Another Financial Panic/Meltdown

With international reserves in virtual free-fall, the black market peso rate plunging, and no sign for months that President Kirchner has any appreciation at all of the gravity of the situation, the country is in the advanced stages of another financial panic/meltdown. This will end badly, another chapter in the long history of Argentine financial crises extending back almost 100 years.

So says Scott Grannis (scottgrannis.blogspot.ca) in edited excerpts from his original article* entitled Another Argentine meltdown.

[The following is presented by Lorimer Wilson, editor of www.FinancialArticleSummariesToday.com and www.munKNEE.com and may have been edited ([ ]), abridged (…) and/or reformatted (some sub-titles and bold/italics emphases) for the sake of clarity and brevity to ensure a fast and easy read. This paragraph must be included in any article re-posting to avoid copyright infringement.]

Grannis goes on to say in further edited excerpts:

The last time Argentina suffered a currency collapse was in early 2002, when the peso plunged almost overnight from 1 to 1 to the dollar to almost 4 to 1. Not content with 12 years of relative prosperity since then, the Argentine government seems dead set on creating another as illustrated by the rapid melt down in the value of the Argentine peso as shown in the chart below.

The problems began to get serious in 2011, when it first became apparent that the government was pegging the peso at a level that was too strong. The evidence for that can be found in the chart above, with the appearance of a black market (now the so-called “blue rate”) peso that was weaker than the official rate…and with the decline in Argentina’s international reserves that began in 2011. When Argentines perceive that the official rate is “too strong,” they want to convert their cash holdings into dollars, which are more likely to hold their value than is the peso over time.

[To the chagrin of the fellow in the following joke entitled “An Argentine Pervert”, the relative worthlessness of the Argentine peso is widely know. The story goes like this:

An Argentine goes to a cabaret/cat house in neighbouring Montevideo, Uruguay.

The Mama-san introduces him to a girl.

The customer whispers on the girl’s ear what he wants to do and the girl yells: “You’ve got to be kidding! Get LOST!!”

Another girl is called and she swears at the customer: “No _ _ _ _ _ _ _ way! Are you crazy?” and runs away.

The Mama-san intervenes saying, “We have all sort of perverts visiting here, but have never had a problem. What did you ask from the girls?”

He answers: “Nothing much …. I just want to pay in Argentine pesos.”]

Argentines began to realize in 2011 that the official exchange rate was artificially high, and thus began the capital flight that has drained the government’s international reserves by almost 50% in the past three years. (The artificially strong peso peg forces the government to sell dollars in the face of an overwhelming demand on the part of the public to buy dollars.)

The government has of course tried to stem the capital flight by imposing exchange controls and import controls, but that has only exacerbated the problem. When it comes to confidence, the owners of capital want to know that they are free to leave if problems develop. If they begin to perceive that investing in a country is like a “roach motel” (i.e., you can put your money in, but you can’t get it out), then capital will find no end of ways to circumvent a government’s attempt to keep capital within its borders.

For the past few years, Argentines have been flocking to the U.S. to spend as much as possible with their credit cards, because in this manner they can effectively buy dollars at the official rate plus a 20% “surcharge” imposed by the government to discourage this practice but that’s better than buying dollars on the black market, where they would have to pay 50-70% more. We had some Argentine friends with us several months ago, and they wanted to stop at every ATM they saw, where they would then withdraw as many dollars as the machine would let them. After buying copious amounts of clothes and electronic goodies, they then sold the dollars they took back with them to Argentina on the black market, and easily paid for the cost of their trip. This is how dollars are fleeing Argentina these days.

In 1916, one U.S. dollar was worth two Argentine pesos. Since then, there have been a four major re-denominations of the peso (in which multiple zeros were erased from its value). If the original peso were still in circulation, one U.S. dollar would be worth about 70 trillion pesos at the current official rate, and 120 trillion at the current black market rate.

Interestingly, the Argentine stock market (in peso terms) has almost tripled in the past two years, even as economic growth has slowed dramatically and inflation has risen to 30-35% per year. But in dollar terms, Argentine stocks have registered virtually no gain at all since 1992, when the peso was pegged at 1 to 1 to the dollar and stayed that way for a decade. I take this to be evidence that stocks can be a decent hedge against inflation over time, but not much more.

It’s time to cry once more for Argentina.

UPDATE: The decline of the peso accelerated today as the central bank apparently made no effort to prop up the peso with dollar sales. The dollar briefly hit 8.2 pesos, and is now trading just under 8. This marks a surge in the dollar’s value against the peso of almost 60% since the beginning of last year,and that in turn points to a 60% rise in Argentina’s general price level over the next year or so. That further implies a doubling of Argentina’s inflation rate.

UPDATE 2:The government-imposed “surcharge” on credit card purchases outside the country is now 35%. Band-aid solutions such as this only make things worse, as they effectively move the country closer and closer to a mega-devaluation, which in turn brings higher inflation and more money-printing, in what ends up being a vicious cycle that ends only when the government abandons all attempts to impose “order” on the economy and allows the free market to work its magic. We’re not there yet.

Conclusion

At this point the central bank has little choice but to announce either a significant devaluation of the official rate or a float of the currency but the underlying problem—too much government spending financed by printing money—will remain. Only a radical change in government policies can restore order to the Argentine economy, and that is unlikely as long as President Kirchner remains in control. It’s time for the grownups to take charge.

[Editor’s Note: The author’s views and conclusions in the above article are unaltered and no personal comments have been included to maintain the integrity of the original post. Furthermore, the views, conclusions and any recommendations offered in this article are not to be construed as an endorsement of such by the editor.]

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